Nnamdi Azikiwe

Nnamdi Azikiwe
Azikiwe c.1963
1st President of Nigeria
In office
1 October 1963  16 January 1966
Prime MinisterAbubakar Tafawa Balewa
Senate PresidentNwafor Orizu
Preceded byPosition established (Elizabeth II
as Queen of Nigeria)
Succeeded byJohnson Aguiyi-Ironsi
(as Military head of state)
3rd Governor-General of Nigeria
In office
16 November 1960  1 October 1963
MonarchElizabeth II
Preceded byJames Robertson
Succeeded byPosition abolished
1st President of the Senate of Nigeria
In office
1 January 1960  1 October 1960
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byDennis Osadebay
Premier of Eastern Nigeria
In office
1 October 1954  1 October 1959
Preceded byEyo Ita
Succeeded byMichael Okpara
2nd President of National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons
In office
May 1946  November 1960
Preceded byHerbert Macaulay
Succeeded byMichael Okpara
Chancellor of University of Nigeria
In office
1961–1966
Chancellor of University of Lagos
In office
1972–1976
Personal details
Born
Nnamdi Benjamin Azikiwe

(1904-11-16)16 November 1904
Zungeru, Northern Nigeria Protectorate
Died11 May 1996(1996-05-11) (aged 91)
Enugu, Enugu State, Nigeria
Political party
Spouses
  • (m. 1936; died 1983)
  • (m. 1973)
Children7, including Chukwuma
Parents
  • Rachel Chinwe Ogbenyeanu (mother)
  • Obed-Edom Chukwuemeka Azikiwe (father)
Alma mater
Occupation
  • Politician
  • lawyer
  • journalist
  • athlete
  • statesman

Nnamdi Benjamin Azikiwe, GCFR PC (16 November 1904 – 11 May 1996), commonly referred to as Zik of Africa, was a Nigerian politician, statesman, and revolutionary leader who served as the 3rd and first black governor-general of Nigeria from 1960 to 1963 and the first president of Nigeria during the First Nigerian Republic (1963–1966). He is widely regarded as the father of Nigerian nationalism as well as one of the major driving forces behind the country's independence in 1960.

Born in Zungeru in present-day Niger State to Igbo parents from Onitsha, Anambra State, Azikiwe learned to speak Hausa which was the main indigenous language of the Northern Region. He was later sent to live with his aunt and grandmother in his hometown Onitsha, where he learnt the Igbo language. Living in Lagos State exposed him to learning the Yoruba language, and by the time he was in college, he had been exposed to different Nigerian cultures and spoke the three major Nigerian languages.

Azikiwe was well travelled. He moved to the United States where he was called Ben Azikiwe, and attended Storer College, Columbia University, the University of Pennsylvania and Howard University. He contacted colonial authorities with a request to represent Nigeria at the 1932 Los Angeles Olympics since he was also an athlete. He returned to Africa in 1934, where he started working as a journalist in the Gold Coast (present day Ghana). During the British West Africa, Azikiwe advocated as a political activist and journalist, for Nigerian and African nationalism.